Apple made a rare misstep with the launch of a far-from-ready Apple Maps app in iOS 6, intended to help keep the rival Google Maps software off its iPhones. Could struggling phone maker Nokia benefit?
The Finnish handset maker reminded the world, or at least readers of the Nokia Conversations blog, that mapping is an area at which it excels. “We understand that ‘pretty’ isn’t enough. You expect excellence in your smartphone mapping experience,” said Nokia’s Adam Fraser.
“Our superior apps are built on the most accurate, automotive-grade Navteq maps, meticulously developed by over 20 years of know-how,” Fraser continued. “We believe that the best user experience comes indeed from precise data, robust processing of core platform functionalities like routing, geocoding and traffic, and by user-friendly apps. All this cannot be built overnight.”
As a brand desperately struggling for a comeback, an Apple blunder in a Nokia wheelhouse is an opportunity it shouldn’t squander. Particularly since any kind words about the 920 were drowned out by talk of Nokia’s own gaffe—an advertisement for its camera technology that didn’t actually show its camera’s technology. Apple Maps offers Nokia an opportunity to remind the world of what it does do well—or even exceptionally well.
Fraser, in his post, offered some compiled “location experience” data comparing the Lumia 920 to the iPhone 5 and the Samsung Galaxy S III.
“Nokia should certainly be highlighting the quality of its maps and navigation services, which are arguably the best in the mobile industry,” Ken Hyers, a senior analyst with Technology Business Research, told eWEEK. “Nokia’s maps and navigation technology is a result of its more than $8 billion investment in Navteq, which it made several years ago. Nokia’s maps work whether or not the phone has a wireless signal, which is a huge benefit for customers who are outside of cellular coverage yet need to know where they are and how to get where they want to go.”
Hyers added that, when Nokia begins selling its new Lumia phones in the coming weeks, it can and should emphasise that it offers “the total package” in mapping.
Forrester analyst Sarah Rotman Epps, in a blog post on what she playfully calls “Mapplegate,” notes that with Nokia maps in nine out of 10 in-car GPS systems, it’s able to continuously mine information and improve its maps.
Still, she adds, “[Apple customers] who claim they won’t download iOS 6 are overreacting—Google is planning to release its maps application in the App Store, and consumers can just download that app if they prefer.”
For now, it would seem too many aren’t holding out. On 24 Sept, Apple announced that it sold more than 5 million iPhone 5 handsets within three days of its launch and that “more than 100 million iOS devices have been updated with iOS 6, the world’s most advanced mobile operating system.”
Apple CEO Tim Cook offered no comment on Maps—to which the public has seemingly reacted with more humour than ire—but noted that iPhone 5 demand has outpaced supply, and the company is working hard “to get an iPhone 5 into the hands of every customers who wants one as quickly as possible.”
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